This book examines the politics of biological disarmament,
focusing on the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) as a treaty
regime and the cornerstone of biological disarmament efforts.
Biological weapons have long been banned, but the ban needs
strengthening. The 1972 Biological Weapons Convention (BWC) is the
cornerstone of this disarmament regime. After years of deadlock and
disappointment its Sixth Review Conference in 2006 generated new
hope that biological disarmament could be reinforced from within.
This book studies the intricate diplomacy of the Sixth Review
Conference as a key moment in the recovery of self-confidence by
the treaty parties. It makes detailed proposals for developing an
accountability framework and stronger institutions so that the
treaty regime can work better. It examines alternative futures for
the BWC and the trajectories to be avoided or encouraged in the
short, medium and longer terms as its regime evolves.
Controversially, by comparing treaty constraints on biological,
chemical and nuclear weapons it restores the BWC firmly to the
realm of disarmament rather than arms control and rescues it from
misleading identifications with counterproliferation and
counterterrorism models.
This book will appeal to policy-makers, diplomats and students
of biological weapons, weapons of mass destruction, international
security and IR in general.
Nicholas A. Sims is Reader in International Relations at the
London School of Economics. He is author of four books on aspects
of disarmament.
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